Prescription abuse
Hunter1
808 Posts
Based on reports which I receive from our PBM, I believe we have an employee/family which is abusing prescription pain relievers. Both employee and spouse receive a narcotic pain reliever each month (has been going on for over a year), and the spouse fills two prescriptions for the same drug each month, prescribed by two doctors and filled at two pharmacies. Now, my problem: Neither my PBM nor my TPA will do anything about this situation, even though the pharmacist at the PBM says that this 'appears to be an abuse situation'. How's that for understatement???
How have you handled a similar situation? Does your PBM get involved? Any advice?
How have you handled a similar situation? Does your PBM get involved? Any advice?
Comments
Six months later it happened again. This time I filed police reports and reported it again to my health care carrier. Again, they didn't care. It evidently wasn't a big enough case for them to pursue and I have heard nothing since.
My advice to you is since you reported it once, that is your only obligation. Let the PBM and TPA handle it if they want to. I was totally frustrated with my situation because I knew it was abuse and everyone said this person was abusing the medication but no one wanted to take any action. Sorry I don't have any better advice but good luck.
SMace: This is exactly the 'head-in-the-sand' approach I don't want to take. I have concerns for my employee's safety and that of their family and the rest of the community. We had another employer in the community that had a similar problem and the individual abusing the drug ended up being killed in an auto accident. In addition, so far, this has cost our plan about $35,000 (street value over $250,000). I am of the opinion that it is the family member who is abusing the drug, so our drug testing will never catch the problem. I don't feel that I'm acting in the best interests of the plan (fiduciary duties) or my employee to just ignore the situation, but I'm not getting any assistance.
But, since you want advice on how to do something about this, call the two doctors and alert them of the dual prescriptions. Be prepared to explain how you came across the info, just in case.
PORK
I guess you have to be a celebrity before anyone really gets excited about these things.
My questions to you regarding disclosure of employee prescription use:
Would you report the use and frequency of any other medications - such as antidepressants, antibiotics, antipsychotics, or the continued use of birth control pills by a married woman who's husband had his vasectomy paid for by your insurance carrier? Do you want to go down this path with your employees?
To repeat, I don't think it is the employee who is using the stuff, I believe it's the spouse.
No, I don't want to go down that path with my employees, and the ONLY reason this caught my attention at all is that this family is having three prescriptions filled per month (actually a lot more than that, but just for this one drug), at a little over $1000/script for two of them, $480/script for the other one. Those kind of numbers jump off the page in a small group like ours.
We have a great in-house attorney, but she could study HIPAA and related regulations for the next three weeks and not know as much about it as many well-versed Forumites. That's why I requested your help.
We have this year put into our plan a $100.00 cost for each ER use for routine medical care, plus the ER charges for their facilities use. We did this because there was way to much ER use for "runny noses" for pppp by the parents of our plan. We have also added an administrative cost for the processing of claims cause by vehicle accidents, where a seat belt was not used. In our state "buckling-up is the law". It is wrong for all plan participants to share in the stupidity of the general plan population. These two items plus a $100.00 increase in participant deductablies helped us to keep our plan premium cost for our employees the same as the past three years. Those that do not get sick or abuse the system are not the one's paying for the self funded medical plan. They pay the premium to be enrolled just incase the medical plan is needed for their individual or family welfare.
Do what is right for the whole plan, based on legal guidance.
PORK
If you want even more leverage, call your broker and tell him/her that your going to drop them if they don't help you.
I stand by my advice not to pursue it unless your TPA or PBM take it on.